Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 254, Decatur, Adams County, 28 October 1914 — Page 6

IZ3 11 11 ■ I=3o 8 THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS J % EZ==ZZ3l=3 OE=X OK=3 XX3==33 ST Corrected tverj Afternoon m r 1 " nr-inEnnrav—- -?r-A

EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 28 (Special to Daily Democrat)—Receipts, 3,200; shipments, 760: official to New York yesterday, 1,140; hogs closing Steady. Yorkers, medium and heavy, $7.85 @57.90; pigs and llgnts. $7.90 W $8.00; roughs, $6,706 $6.95; stags, s6.oo*?i $6.75; sheep. 3,000; strong; top lambs $8.00; cattle, 375; steady. G. T BURK. Corn 97c Clover seed $7.25 Alsike seed $6.75 Wheat $1.03 Rye 80c Barley 55c Timothy Seed $2.00 to $2.25 Cats 45c NIBLICK 4 CO. Eggs 24c Butter 13 to 37 FULLEnKAMPS. Eggs 24c Butter 18c@25c BERLINGb. Indian Runner Dacia 8c Spring chickens 11c Fowls 10c Ducks 9c Geese 8c Young turkeys 12c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys 12c lid Roosters 5c Butter 17c Eggs 21c Above prices patu for poultry free from feed.

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS. Notice is hereby given that Monday. the 2nd day of November, will be the last day to pay your fall installment of taxes. The treasurer’s office will be open from 7 o’clock a. m. until 5 o’clock p. m., each week day and the books will positively be closed at 5 o'clock p. m. on Monday, November 2nd. All taxes not paid by that time will become delinquent and the penalty of ten per cent will bo added. Do not put your taxes off, as they must be paid and the law points out the duty of the treasurer. Those who have bought and sold property and wish a division of taxes or wish to make partial payment should come in at once. Don’t wait for the rush. No receipts can be laid away for any one. So do no* ask it. W. J. ARCHBOLD, 236t22 Treasurer Adams County. Fruit Trees Sprayed I have the best power sprayer in the country and will do your work right. Will spray down the tree as well as from the ground, getting both top and bottom of the branches. See me or drop me a card. A. W. BAXTER. 619 Elm Street MR. AND MRS. RHINE, D. C. Chiropractors. Chronis, Spinal and Nervous Diseases No charge for consultation. Hours: 9:30 to 12 a. m. 2:00 to 4:30 p. m.; 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. 209 South hird St. 'Phone 761

■y 3.0. S. has saved hundreds of families from distress on M L BY the High Seas. MONEYIN THE BANK has saved thousands of n j f A families from distress on land. r‘4 I fJ o jl A J ff.-j. Science has accomplished alot of new thing's In waterpower ff r '] It ’ Jl and air power but hasnl improved on man power.—Nothing’s© b I far in. the history of humanity has been discovered as an j acceptable substitute for honest, steady labor." i HLRMRT KAUf MAN. fl 1 II i *• >. ZJL U I 111 If 1 -r -r TT r r r x x r ‘TW l| I if*®! 01 b flbams fw|a! W—JIXJ .©ecatur-W-

KALVER MARKETS. Wool 21c@25c . Beef hides ...11c Calf ; Tallow Sheep pelts [email protected] i LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. Spring chickens Up I Indiana Runned ducks 8c Fowls 10c Ducks Geese .....8c Young turkeys 12c Tom turkeys ....4 12c Old hen turkeys 12c Old Roosters fee I Butter 17c iggs 21c Above prices paid for poultry free front feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butter fat, No. 1 32<ri Butter fat, No. '2 29c | Creamery Butter, wholesale 32c Creamery butter, retail 35c COAL PRICES. Stove $7.50 Egg 7.50 Chestnut, hard $7.75 Poca, egg and lump $5.00 W. Ash s4.&u V. Splint $4.25 H. Valley $4.25 R. Lion $4.50 Cannell $6.00 J. Hill $5.00 Kentucky $4.5( Lurig $4.G<

SAGE IB S« TO DARKEN Hffl Look years younger! Use the oldi time Sage Tea and Sulphur and nobody will know. You can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost <:v r night if you’ll get a 50 eent bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy’ at any drug store. Million.-; of bottles o. this old, fampus Sage Tea Recipe are sold annually, says a well-known druggist here, Ixv’ause it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. I Those whose hair is turning gray, becoming faded, dry, scraggly and thin have a surprise awaiting them, because after one or two applications the gray hair vanishes and your locks become luxuriantly dark and lx?autiful—all dandruff goes, scalp itching and falling hair I stops. This is the age of youth. Gray-haired, I unattractive folks aren’t wanted around, I so get busy with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur to-nieht and you’ll be delighted with your dark, handsome hair .and your youthful appearance within a few days. HEADACHE STOPS, NEURALGIA GONE Dr.t James’ Headache Powders give instant relief—Cost dime a package. Nerve-racking, splitting or dull, throbbing headaches yield in just a few moments to Dr. James’ Headache Powders which cost only 10 cents a package at any drug store. It’s the quickest, surest headache relief in the whole world, v Don’t suffer! Relieve the agony and distress now! You can. Millions of men and women e have found that headache and neuralgia misery is needless, Get what you ask for,

11 WKrt | s sNewalg'ia i M There is no need to suffer t he 9 annoying, excruciating pain of » neuralgia: Sloan’s Liniment, laid ion gently will soothe the nehing head like magic. Don’t delay. Try it at once. Heal What Otlierr Say •‘I have been a sufferer with Neurrilgia for several years and hrivo tried different Lininwntn, but Hoan’s Liniment is ths B best Liniment for Noufaluia. on earth. D I have tried it BU^re-«rfa’ly; it has never B failed.”-— l\ U. William*, Auyurta, Ark. B ■ fifrs. Huth C. Claypool, Independence, fl Mo., write. ‘‘A friend of tnirs told u? B B about your Linim-nt. We have bse A using B B it for 13 years and think there is nothing B B cuts, burn s, bruises, sore throat, headaches H 3 end on everything else. We can't get M fl r.luug without it. We think it is the best Q 43 Liniment made.*’ , l ; SLOWS I I LINIMENT! m is flic best remedy for rheumatism, | M backache, sore throat and spiains. ■ At al! dealcis, 25c. |j U bend four cents in stamps foi c | TRIAL BOTTLE £ J?r. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. Dept. B. Philadelphia, Pa. E ■TsT" Was So Worn Out Had to Get Help or Die. Everything Faired to Help Until He Got Vinol. Read What He Says. Atlee, Va. — “I was rapidly losing flesh, was weak, run-down, had no appetite, my blood was poor and I could not sleep nights. I am a farmer and truckman, so had to keep about my work, but I was so weak, tired and worn out I knew I had got to get help or the. “Doctors gave me medicines and I tried everything that was recommended but I failed to get any help until I tried Vinol. lam now taking my third bottle, my appetite is fine, I sleep well all night, my blood is good and I am much stronger,in fact I feel like another man. Vinol is the best medicine I have ever taken.”—Orlando W. Borkey, Atlee, Va. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic, is a constitutional remedy for poor blood and all run-down, weak and debilitated conditions. Vinol creates a good hearty appetite and digestion, and makes pure healthy blood. Jf we can induce you io try a bottle of Vinol as a body builder and strengthcreator, and you do not find it is all we claim,* we will return your money on demand. Smith, Yager &. Falk, Druggists “A f SHINE IN EVERY DROP” Black Silk Stove Polish is different. It 1) 't dry out; can bo used to the HMtcff last dn;p; liquid ord paste one quality; absolutely ro v.ist< ; no dust or dirt. You get your money's worth. Kdkurf Black Silk * Stove Polish is nnt only most eeoßomieal. bt?t it p.'ves a brilliant, silky lustre thatcannot bo obtained with any other polish. Black Silk Stove Polish dot® not rub oft it lasts four times as long as ordinary I polish -so it aavea you ti:ne, work and money. _ ’ Don’t forget—when you want stove polish, be sure to I—- ask for Black Silk. Ifiticn’t the best stove polish you ever used -your dealer will refund J our mone y• Black Silk Stove Polish H 3 J Works, Sterling, Illinois. Uro Black Silk Air Drying Xy I rfil 1 1-011 Enamel on grates, rep- p MB isters, stove-pipes, and auto-h j -L mobile tire runs. Prevents rus i i.. g. Try it. Übo B ’ Sil!c Blctrl po,e i II 11 pjqfl'lll iM |l I s h for silverware, nickel,t in- I Kill 2 SI? 11 *'fell v'aro or br?r,3. It works | quickly, easily and leaves a I brilliant surface. It has no I equal for use on automobiles. I

LIVES TO GATHER IN JOV Goldfinch Really Works H’rd Only About Ore Month Throughout the Year’s Twelve. I A good many years ago the old duke of Argyll came to America and at- •’* h:w:ty was taken to Niagara Falls to gaze on the glories of cat- ' aracte and rapids. His hosts led him I to a point of vantage just below the thundering downfall. They turned to . him to get sight, of his first expresj slon of awe and rupture, and found i that he had his back to the falls and was looking wonder-eyed at an Amer- : lean goldfinch pulling seeds from a : thlstletop July is the month cf the goldfinch, although, perhaps, the bird would not !so c.. 11 it. With his mate, in July he . is housekeeping, and is doing hlfc ' i-hsre of the work of keepins hungry ; chililf' n fed. For 11 months he leads ; a fr-. • life, singing every other minute and getting all the joy there is ■ handy When the duke cf Ar-vl! had looked on the goldflnSh he said: “It Is, in i truth, a goldfinch." lew birds have ; such slight clothing to wear. The I scarlet tanager cannot beast himself ' above the goldfinch in point of taiI me.nt. Even the golden-rod is envious i when the goldfinch weaves by over- ‘ bead. This July bird, when be is fly- . Ing, swings hammocks in the sky. He ! has a weaving flight across the fields, i and be sings all the way. In late September country folk who | have known the goldfinch through the i summer miss him and ask where he > has gone. He hasn’t gone anywhere. ! He is still with them. Jju't they don’t I know him. He drops his gold and-black ■ feathers and puts on a subdued coat, I shaded to be in keeping with the melancholy days. But in dun or in gold ho sings. He has a heart that goes all the time. HARD T 9 KILL GFf RABBITS Growth of the Pe t In Tasmania Has Created a Serroi-siftroblem for Agriculturists. As in other states in Australia, the ■ problem of dealing with the rabbit j ! pest has been given considerable at- j .tention by farmers ami pastoralists in 1 , Tasmania for sorae time. The matter was taken up by the I Farmers’ and Stockowners’ association -i ■ at a recent meeting of the council of I that body. Among other things it was | ! stated that information had been coli lectsd bearing upon the trade in ra’o- ■ ’ bit skin in this state. The figures in-: dicated that not less than 5,000,000 ' skins were exported from Tasmania each year, the value of which was un- ■ der $250,000. j As poison was also generally used for destroying the pest, it was quite ( ; safe to assume that as many more . were killed, making the death roll equal to 10,000,000. Adding to that at ' least 2,-000,000 left at the end of each, winter to breed again, the conclusion was arrived at that the lands of the, ' state were growing every year 12.000,-; ! 000 rabbits. I Taking these figures as a basis and. i allowing 15 rabbits to consume as i much grass- as one sheep, it was com-. puted that the rnfcllt was occupying the place cf SOO,COO sheep, or, in other; words, taking up about •one-third of the lands; for which the state received , under $250,000, as against the value; cf B'lo,ooo sheep, which would be not less than. $1,500 00) at a low estimate., Founded Lawrence University. Amos A. Lawrence, an eminent mer- ; chant and. philanthropist, was born 100 years ago in Boston. After gradu-, atiug from Harvard he entered meri ci ntilo business aad accumulated a large fortune. ITe assisted financially i in the ccicnteticn of Kansas in the i early fifties and the town of Lawrence, i ! in that state, was named in his honor. Ho was twice nominated for governor of Massachusetts by the Whigs and j Hrionlsts. In 1346 he gave SIO,OOO for the establishment of a literary Inetii tution in Wisconsin. This institution was situated at Appleton, and was i called Lawrence university in honor of the founder. Mr. Lawrence died at J ahant. Mass., in 1386. His only son, ‘he Right Rev. William Lawrence, is the present Episcopal bishop of Masi aachusetts. Ccott's Novels Still Read. It was just about one hundred years ago that Walter Scott finished and - ' hiished hte novel “Waverly.” He •■aged to keep its authorship secret for some time. The ‘ Unknown” soon ; became the “Great Unknown,” for 'Waverly” was followed by “Guy Manor ring.' “The Antiquary” and other stories that a world was soon to read. It is said that Scott is out of date. The circulating library records do not - ! bear out the saying. We shall not be i ' here when time rolls around with the i . proof or disproof, but it seems safe to say that in another hundred years ; the reading public will not have to , turn to an encyclopedia for informa- ! tiou concerning author or book when I Scott ard "Waverly" are mentioned. ’ Bad Teeth Cause Enlarged Tonsils. Doctor Layton of London says that j before operating for adenoids and ton-1 sila when a child has a cold and en-' larged tonsils try first to improve his. general health and have the teeth at- j tended to. He says that four bad teeth | are enough to effect the lymphoid tis-1 sues of the neck and so ehlarge the tonsils. A trip to the dentist’s and i deep breathing exercises will almost invariably cure tonsil trouble if the ' disease is local and not a general condition of the system or not due to some recent infection.

MEAT’ CAUSE CF KIDNEY TROUBLE Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers—Meat forms uric acid. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but Hush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted authority who telle us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the Icidneya in their efforts to expel it from the blood. 1 hey bceotne sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad v ou have rheumatic twinges, lhe urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three time during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste get four ounces of Jad’ Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive: cannot injure, and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. o FOR SALE—Fresh candled eggs, 22. per dozen. At Berling's Packin'.: House. 250tf I “Here is the Answer Tin I Webster’s 1 New International i The Mercian Webster S Every day in your talk and reading, at == s home, on the street car, in the office, shop § 2 and school you likely question the mean- . inr of some new word. A friend asks: -I j “What makes mortar harden?” You stek h § the location o f LochKatrine or the pronun- § § ciation of jujutsu. What is white coal? s This New Creation answers ail kinds of § § questions in language,History.Biography, g s Fiction, Foreign Words, Trades, Arts aud = = Sciences, with final authority, t 400.000 s ♦s 6000 hluttrations. / '„> lk .= = CostS4CO.COO. /J./ t- | 2730 Pages. = The only dictionary with g S the nc:c divided pa ae.-cha.r- ~3n • /k S = acterized as “A Stroke of »= =? Genius.*' = India Paper Eci ticn: / >4 • < 8 Qa thia. op..<me, Btrnrr, M India paper. Vvi»at a satis2 faction to own the Merriam Vv-’' /£’ § Webster in a form so light kJ f ’ ~ and so convenient to use I = One half the thickness nnds~|\Vc s, t T'? I S weight of Regular Edition. 1 . J- 1 • \ > s Regular Edition; ! A- '■'< s Ou Kronitboofcmper. WL F ■ U i ;T •r.i'si .. I XSSSSE—g Kwitwihia > ’ ’• >-'-W S public-1: OU 1 .' *- t= anj receive <_ ,$■ . . ( S TFEEnib 'I I j €.&C. ' s MERRIAM T-, 1 co., g a X j-"*-' — ...- w---- - » wm, WOOD KORS Leave your order at< i fur ; our winter’s supply < i’; .- vy wood. Go cd forb purposes. May also L. n cook stove. Phene 322. . 0. C. CHROKISTER.

M“* • ® ••iS 8w -W <w« { '1 ri t ■»— *I« Ji i iO g u ZZmmZ 09 81 — OB ■■ BEgW 3 ,■ . ■ B t-' sill r Jll LI I fl I r < '' ' ih.. ■■ ? .. v HU The cold fx - i.' morning and evenings, will m .<c you wmt a good warm heavy Blanket, and we surely have them in all sizes in any weights in S Cotton Woolnap and in all w in!. Another ship 5 merit of Bweatets has just arrived and we are 5 sure .. . „ 1 it you in a Sweater in any color || size and price 1! «* — ■_.— —o THE BOSTON STORE fc=ilill==Hlll==;illl l= -.m .... .... s

Choice Footwear Our exhibit of Women’s Fall Footwear is I well worth the attention of every woman whois all interested in wearing better a shoes. EYory shoe we show is a choice creation from some special maker. There’s an art of real excellence an i superiority about .-n- shoes. May we have the ph asure of vhT.viry >oa the new models. M I r — '■ T " ■ ■■' = g PEOPLES & GERKE| 1- • - ■■ Upholstering and Feather Cleaning ~ IIWT W I am now located in the Gregory building, corner of Madison and Third streets and am prepared to do all kinds of UPHOLSTERING AND FEATHER (LEANING WORK L;t me make your old furniture look like new. The best satisfaction guaranteed. Work called for and delivered. ! \AZ. F. HEL//VI B ick of Year- C-Well store. ‘ Ccr. 3rd. and Madison St. Jb2s DECATUR to TOLEDO VIA CLOVER LEAF’ ROUTE Every Sunday See J. H. THOMPSON, Agent Decatur for Information We have some new and second hand fop Buggies, Carriages and Storm Cabs at Prices that are Right. ew Buggy Tops—different sizes rc?dy to set on, at the BEOT CARRIAGE WORKS WH la. S KIMOE STS. PKOW I??.